New England Patriots at New Orleans Saints

The Patriots played one of the worst defensive games in their history in Week 1, losing at home in the season's Thursday opener to Kansas City, 42-27. New England gave up 537 total yards, marking just the 10th time a Patriot team has allowed 500 or more yards in a game. The Chiefs' Alex Smith passed for four TDs, two of them covering at least 75 yards, while NE's Tom Brady completed only 16 of 36 passes and failed to throw for a touchdown, posting a 70.0 rating. Mike Gillislee rushed for all three TDs for the Pats, who were outscored by a 21-0 margin in the fourth quarter.

On Monday night in Minnesota, the Saints also struggled on defense, allowing 470 total yards, recording no takeaways and forcing only five incompletions in a 29-19 loss to the Vikings. Drew Brees passed for 291 yards and a TD for the Saints, who scored only one touchdown and four field goals on five red-zone possessions. Adrian Peterson managed only 18 rushing yards in his return to Minnesota, as the Saints were limited to 60 yards on the ground and averaged 2.9 yards per carry. The Vikings scored on six of their first eight possessions and punted only twice.

Since 2001, the home team has won all four games in the series (three at New England, one at New Orleans), scoring an average of 30.5 points per game. The Patriots won the last meeting, on October 13, 2013 at Foxborough, by a 30-27 score on a 17-yard TD pass from Tom Brady to Kenbrell Thompkins with five seconds remaining in the fourth quarter. The last time they squared off in New Orleans, Drew Brees threw for five TD passes and a perfect passer rating in a 38-17 Saints victory.

Last week marked the first time since 2013 that Tom Brady threw as many as 35 passes in a game without a TD pass. It was the first time since 2008 -- when an injury ended his season -- that Brady failed to throw for a score in his first game of a season. He has lost consecutive September games within a single season only once in his career, in 2012.

Drew Brees has a 123.3 passer rating in four games versus the Patriots -- highest by any QB against New England all-time (minimum 100 attempts). He is 3-1 against the Pats (including 2-0 with the Chargers); his teams have totaled 106 points in his last three games against NE.

Since Brees' arrival in New Orleans in 2006, the Patriots (29.6) and Saints (27.5) rank 1-2 in points per game; the Saints are first in total yards per game (405.0), and the Pats (385.4) are second. But in that period, the Patriots are No. 3 in scoring defense (18.9 points per game), while New Orleans is 28th (23.9). New Orleans' 359.4 yards allowed per game in that span is 31st; only Cleveland's 360.2 is worse.

NEW ORLEANS -- The defending Super Bowl champion New England Patriots got 10 days to stew over their shocking 42-27 season-opening home loss to the Kansas City Chiefs.

The New Orleans Saints looked as befuddled as ever defensively and uncharacteristically impotent on offense in a 29-19 Monday night road loss to the Minnesota Vikings.

One thing is certain when the Saints face the Patriots on Sunday in New Orleans' home opener: Someone will be leaving the Mercedes-Benz Superdome 0-2. And in a 16-game NFL season in which every game counts, the loser will be digging a quick hole from which statistics suggest it is difficult to escape.

For the Saints in particular, another slow start could prove decisive. New Orleans finished 7-9 and failed to make the playoffs in each of the past three seasons. The Saints started 0-2 in 2014, 0-3 in 2015 and 0-3 last season.

Since owning an 11-5 record on Dec. 29, 2013, they have gone 1,358 days without a winning record.

No wonder quarterback Drew Brees is sounding the alarm.

"A sense of urgency has been created," said Brees, who threw for 291 yards on 27-of-37 passing against Minnesota but failed to produce a touchdown in four red-zone opportunities. "It's very important. It's our home opener, and we want to get back on track."

Patriots quarterback Tom Brady lit into his team's performance against the Chiefs.

"Obviously, what we did the other night is not good enough by any means for any particular phase of the game and any position," Brady said. "You get outscored by 21 points and outgained by 200 yards in the fourth quarter, there's a lot of things that need adjusting. When you get beat the way we got beat, I think that sat with everyone for a very long time, and we're going to have to do something about it."

The game will be a homecoming for Patriots wide receiver Brandin Cooks, who spent his first three seasons in New Orleans and was traded before the draft for first- and third-round picks, which wound up being tackle Ryan Ramczyk and defensive end Trey Hendrickson.

Cooks, only 23, is coming off consecutive 1,100-yard receiving seasons, and his value as a long-ball threat will increase because of the season-ending anterior cruciate ligament injury to Julian Edelman and the concussion/knee injury sustained last week by slot receiver Danny Amendola.

Also, Brady's security blanket, tight end Rob Gronkowski, looked rusty in the loss to the Chiefs, catching just two passes for 33 yards. That figures to make Cooks even more important to Brady.

"Brandin works extremely hard, is a very detail-oriented kid, practices hard and really tries to do things exactly the way you want him to do them," New England coach Bill Belichick said. "(He's) coachable, dependable."

Brees said of Cooks, "He was a great part of this team for three years. I wish him the best of success, although I'd rather him not go off in this game."

"I don't want to see him pulling the arrows," Saints left tackle Terron Armstead said, referring to Cooks' post-touchdown celebrations.

Against Minnesota, the Saints' defense displayed some maddening similarities to the units that have finished in the bottom five of the NFL rankings the past two seasons -- a tepid pass rush and opponents running free in the open field.

The Saints allowed Vikings quarterback Sam Bradford time to survey the field in completing 27 of 32 passes for 346 yards and three touchdowns with no turnovers. Three of his incompletions were drops.

Attacking that defense this week is a team that normally bounces back after falling. Since 2004, the Patriots are 42-6 following a loss.

"I don't know (why)," Brady said. "We need to play better than we played last week. For three hours a week, we've got to be at our best mentally, physically and emotionally. ... We've got to go out and earn it."

Both starting tackles for the Saints -- Armstead (shoulder) and right tackle Zach Strief (knee) -- did not practice Wednesday.